The World is Not Enough (1999)
A film review by Justin Felix
Screenplay by Bruce Feirstein, Michael France, Neal Purvis, Dana Stevens,
and Robert Wade.
Directed by Michael Apted.
Starring Pierce Brosnan, Sophie Marceau, and Denise Richards.
Theme song performed by Garbage.
Rated PG-13 (contains lots of Bond violence, Bond sex, and Bond innuendo)
128 mins.
Synopsis: British secret agent James Bond sleeps with three women
(a doctor, a nuclear physicist, and a wealthy oil inheritor, no less!),
drives a nifty car, and saves the world from a guy who has a bullet in his
head.
Comments: This is Bond Film #19. Nineteen James Bond movies. It's
incredible when you think about it. After the sequel number goes up too
high, usually filmmakers drop the numbers from their titles because they
know that audiences get a little suspicious about the quality of sequels.
Alien 4, hence, becomes Alien Resurrection, and Hellraiser
4 changes into Hellraiser: Bloodlines. The people behind the
Bond films, however, are even smarter. The movie titles make no mention of
their main character, and none of them suggest that they are a sequel.
The World is Not Enough, for example, bears no relation to the
previous Bond film, . To further the cleverness,
both titles are really cool. I remember seeing a poster for The World
is Not Enough during the summer and immediately being drawn into the
film's hype. Has there been a cooler film title in recent memory than
The World is Not Enough?
The World is Not Enough is not only the nineteenth Bond outing, but
it is also the third movie featuring Pierce Brosnan as 007. I'm not going
into an elaborate discussion of which Bond actor has been the best; most
argue correctly that it will always be Sean Connery. Brosnan, however, has
done a pretty good job at establishing himself as a respectable second.
The World is Not Enough is certainly not the best Bond film ever
made (indeed Brosnan's last outing in Tomorrow Never Dies is
slightly better), but it is a respectable, watchable action flick good for
a Saturday afternoon matinee.
The World is Not Enough doesn't deviate much from the traditional
Bond formula. Many of the same supporting characters appear here: Miss
Moneypenny, M, and Q. Bond scores with several good-looking
models-turned-actresses. He drives around in a souped-up sports car. The
world is in danger, and he saves the day. Sometimes the routine is good to
see. Unfortunately, another part of the formula exists in this film: bad
guys don't kill the good guys--they just talk and talk until the good guys
find an avenue to break free and save the day. I don't know how many times
someone had a chance to ice either Bond, M, or the nuclear physicist (more
about this ridiculous character in a bit) but managed to screw it up
because either (a) they wanted to talk, (b) they wanted to gloat, or (c)
they wanted to restrain their captor for some other bad guy to talk or
gloat to. Sometimes you just want to tell the bad guys to shoot. They'd
win that way.
There are actually a couple bad guys this time around. I won't spoil the
fun by revealing who the secret bad guy is; although, if you have half a
brain, you'll figure it out pretty quickly. The "bad guy from the
beginning," Renard, is fairly original though. Apparently, he has a bullet
lodged in his brain that's slowly killing him. That makes him, in some
respects, more dangerous than other Bond villains because, let's face it,
he doesn't have much to lose. Also, apparently, this bullet makes him numb
to outside stimuli, so he doesn't feel pain. This makes him a bad ass when
it comes to fighting. It may not be realistic, but it's still cool.
The most absurd aspect of The World is Not Enough is not its
convoluted storyline or electronic gadgets. Denise Richards, pouty
supermodel babe from such campy movies as and
Wild Things, laughably tries to pass herself off as a nuclear
physicist. Folks, this is the most ridiculous casting I've seen in a long
while. My friend and I laughed a number of times as she spouted dialogue
unconvincingly. She was included, I'm sure, just so we could see her do a
number of wet T-shirt scenes in the ultimate showdown with Renard inside a
flooding submarine. Oh, by the way, this "scientific thinker's" name is
Dr. Christmas Jones. I don't know which is worse: her name or the final
Bond line in the film as he scores with Dr. Jones. I'll give you a hint;
it has to do with the old adage that Christmas comes but once a year.
Ugh.
While The World is Not Enough may not be a groundbreaking or
original entry in the action film genre, it is still 007 and still
entertaining. The film's opening, featuring the title song performed by
the rock group Garbage, is quite good. The closing credits promise that
Bond will return in another film. At least, unlike other film series that
have gone on well too long like Batman and Hellraiser, this
is something to look forward to rather than cringe at.
Rating:
  
(Out of five)
All of my Justin's reviews are archived at The Internet Movie Database
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